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The Israeli security cabinet issued a statement on Tuesday warning against easing Iranian sanctions, ahead of a closed door meet in Geneva between Iran and the P5+1 powers on Iran's nuclear programme. (AFP/File)

Following a meeting late on Monday, the Israeli security cabinet warned against any “partial agreement that would fail to bring about the full dismantling of the Iranian military nuclear program…(which) could lead to the collapse of the sanctions regime,” Agence France Presse reported.

On Monday, Netanyahu and the Israeli security cabinet reiterated their warnings against Iran, calling on the world powers meeting in Iran to be wary of the Islamic Republic.

“Iran believes it can get by with cosmetic concessions that would not significantly impede its path to developing nuclear weapons, concessions that could be reversed in weeks,” the statement said, AFP reported.

The security cabinet also called on the P5+1 to "reject Iran’s attempts to reach a deal that would leave it with the capability to develop nuclear weapons.”

An Israeli official speaking to AFP added that the seven-member security council met on Monday night but had decided to release their statement on Tuesday morning to coincide with the Geneva talks.

According to AFP's source, Israel does not outright reject the notion of Iran have a peaceful nuclear energy programme -- it just rejects one that involves uranium enrichment or plutonium production.

“Iran claims that it supposedly has the ‘right to enrich.’ But a country that regularly deceives the international community, that violates UN Security Council resolutions ... has no such right,” the statement said, according to AFP.

The Geneva talks are aimed at reaching a solution over Iran’s nuclear programme. Israel and its Western allies claim that Tehran is seeking to develop an atomic bomb -- allegations Iran denies.

As a result of its nuclear programme, Iran has been slapped with several rounds of economic sanctions.

Israel wants Iran to meet four conditions before the sanctions are eased: halting all uranium enrichment; removing all enriched uranium from its territory; closing its underground nuclear facility in Qom; and halting construction of a plutonium reactor, AFP reported.

Israel is refusing to rule out the possibility of future military strikes against the Islamic Republic, with Netanyahu telling the UN General Assembly in New York in September that Israel would act unilaterally if necessary, according to AFP.